Toromont Industries CIO Mike Cuddy doesn't
buy the claim that IT departments aren't generating new
ideas.
By Mike Cuddy,
Toromont Industries, Information Week, July 23 2007, 1000
hrs
The claim that CEOs are looking for
new ideas but many just don't see them coming from the IT
department leaves me puzzled. A recent Gartner report stated that
CIOs and their IT teams are no longer innovative and generating new
ideas. But this doesn't hold up.
Do CEOs think they can lay out an
innovation plan for their companies simply by reading the latest
issue of Technology-In-Action magazine? Or, more frightening, do
they buy into some exciting, expensive new proposal for the "latest
technique in mind-melding" from a consulting organization?
Most CIOs strive to get the housekeeping--the running of IT--done
in the mornings so they can spend their afternoons pursuing
innovative business uses of technology. But for some IT
organizations, the morning work may take all day, leaving little
time for new-value creation. Gartner contends that CIOs who aren't
constantly innovating are simply holding back. I counter that these
executives may simply be overchallenged with housekeeping.
To free up more time for idea creation, many companies have tried
outsourcing some of their operational tasks, such as network
operations and help desk support, only to replace them with new
burdens like contract negotiations, service-level agreement
stewardship, and service-credit arguments, which come on top of
user complaints that still won't go away. This focus on daily
operations doesn't mean that CIOs are waiting for someone else to
come up with the next great idea.
Some CIOs are conquering the operations challenge by bringing
automation technologies to the data center, as Toyota Financial
Services CIO Shaun Coyne recently noted in connection with
Optimize's survey on the CIO's evolving role
(optimizemag.com/issue/068/bl.htm). In fact, 56% of the survey
respondents see CIO influence growing, suggesting that more CIOs
are indeed taking care of operational business.
Gartner claims that companies--that is, CIOs--are "waiting to be
spoon-fed a prepackaged solution ... like CRM or business
intelligence." Huh? Does Gartner have any idea how disruptive a
change initiative such as CRM can be?
Successful CIOs clearly understand the business results needed and
continually seek opportunities to improve performance through
technology. What analysts often misunderstand is that practical
implementation considerations weigh heavily in the assessment of
innovation opportunities. Because CIOs are accountable for
delivering the end result and not just the technical solution,
striking a balance between innovation and pragmatism becomes a key
aspect of IT management.
I agree that risk aversion poses a huge barrier to innovation at
many large organizations. Risk occurs at two levels: costs and
speed. Costs tend to climb because companies usually require more
investment as they grow. The need for speed intensifies as well,
because the larger the company, the longer it can take for new
ideas to make their way through the internal approval system. A
business could lose its competitive advantage, or the technology
may grow stale before the new ideas are ever implemented.
These risks must be mitigated, but the domain for IT innovation
still rests comfortably with the CIO. More than three-quarters of
the Optimize survey respondents say the CIO is becoming more of a
business leader. I believe leadership through innovation is the
reason.